Sample report / Work

What the Can you survive a real meeting in English? report could reveal

This is a synthetic learner report generated from the same prompt bank, scoring, interpretation, lesson, and recommendation builders used by the live diagnostic.

Sample score

69%

B2

sample level

8

review points

Work meeting readiness

Internal meetings ready

Internal meetings ready

Pronunciation is the professional communication risk. The next step is not harder vocabulary; it is safer tone and clearer structure in meeting turns, clarification, summaries, and action items.

Readiness

Internal meetings ready

Mapped to meeting turns, clarification, summaries, and action items.

Risk area

Pronunciation

0% may show up in real work.

Best area

Naturalness

100% is supporting the profile.

Next proof

Write one client update and answer one meeting prompt with 70%+ tone score.

Important caveat

Work readiness is situational, not a certification.

Report story

B2 with a clear path to C1

Your strongest signals are naturalness and business english. The fastest improvement path is cleaning up pronunciation and vocabulary, then retesting in a focused diagnostic.

Already working

Natural phrasing is making the English sound less translated.

Workplace English is already useful for common internal situations.

Holding back the result

Pronunciation is likely reducing perceived fluency more than vocabulary does.

Vocabulary gaps are forcing simpler phrasing and weaker answer choices.

Speaking output is too short or too hesitant to carry the level by itself.

Fastest visible win: Listening tolerance: Replay missed audio twice: once for meaning, once for exact reduced words.

Lesson brief

Listening is the first repair target

These are not random mistakes. The report found reusable lesson targets in listening, pronunciation and real life. Fix these first, then retake a focused diagnostic instead of jumping into another mixed quiz.

Listening

Catch the real spoken signal

Meeting English: In a meeting, what does the speaker say?

Better: We are out of time.

Open lesson

Pronunciation

Keep the target sound audible

Meeting English: Did you hear ship or sheep?

Better: ship

Open lesson

Real life

Turn the answer into a survival script

Meeting English: Buy medicine that does not make you sleepy with $12 using a train-station kiosk.

Better: Non-drowsy cold medicine and water.

Open lesson

Pattern diagnosis

The repeated signals the report would group

Listening

Listening tolerance

watch

3 of 8 reviewed prompts exposed this pattern. Average signal: 63%.

Meeting English: In a meeting, what does the speaker say?

Next move: Replay missed audio twice: once for meaning, once for exact reduced words.

Pronunciation

Sound clarity

sharp

1 of 1 reviewed prompt exposed this pattern. Average signal: 0%.

Meeting English: Did you hear ship or sheep?

Next move: Practice the exact minimal pairs or read-aloud lines from missed prompts.

Vocabulary

Word choice

sharp

1 of 1 reviewed prompt exposed this pattern. Average signal: 0%.

Meeting English: Before we continue, let's make sure we are on the same page.

Next move: Review missed words as phrases, not isolated translations.

Speaking

Spoken production

sharp

1 of 1 reviewed prompt exposed this pattern. Average signal: 45%.

Meeting English: You are asked for an estimate in a meeting, but you need to check one detail first. What do you say?

Next move: Add one reason and one concrete detail. Short answers usually understate your real level.

Writing

Writing clarity

watch

1 of 1 reviewed prompt exposed this pattern. Average signal: 57%.

Meeting English: The meeting agreed to test the new checkout on Friday, send feedback by Monday, and let Sara own the bug list. Write a two-sentence summary.

Next move: Add one reason and one concrete detail. Short answers usually understate your real level.

Question-by-question preview

The report is more than a score

1. Real life / B2

0%

Meeting English: Buy medicine that does not make you sleepy with $12 using a train-station kiosk.

Sample answer: A magazine, headphones, and perfume.

Better: Non-drowsy cold medicine and water.

Pattern: Short, diagnostic, and reusable across tests, funnels, and practice loops.

2. Pronunciation / A1

0%

Meeting English: Did you hear ship or sheep?

Sample answer: sheep

Better: ship

Pattern: Short, diagnostic, and reusable across tests, funnels, and practice loops.

3. Vocabulary / B2

0%

Meeting English: Before we continue, let's make sure we are on the same page.

Sample answer: look at the exact same paper page

Better: make sure we understand the situation the same way

Pattern: Meeting phrases like this make users feel they are decoding the room, not just words.

4. Listening / B1

0%

Meeting English: In a meeting, what does the speaker say?

Sample answer: We are outside the time.

Better: We are out of time.

Pattern: This is a fast-call phrase people miss even when the vocabulary is basic.

5. Listening / B2

0%

Meeting English: Listen to a US-style meeting phrase. What does the speaker usually mean?

Sample answer: Discuss the topic immediately

Better: Postpone the topic

Pattern: Meeting phrases can be regional, so a good diagnostic teaches safe interpretation rather than fake certainty.

6. Speaking / B2

45%

Meeting English: You are asked for an estimate in a meeting, but you need to check one detail first. What do you say?

Sample answer: I think it is good because important.

Better: I think the main point is clear. I would explain it with one reason, one example, and a short final result.

Pattern: Good meeting English protects credibility when the user cannot answer immediately.

7. Listening / B1

0%

Meeting English: What are action items?

Sample answer: The emotional highlights of the meeting

Better: The tasks people need to do next

Pattern: Workplace listening should test phrases people actually hear in meetings.